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Real Student Stories

Meet Alma

An international PhD student, Alma made a serious suicide attempt in her teens and has battled with depression for most of her life. Intensive therapy has given her tools to help manage her depression and live productively... more >>
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Students Against Depression
 

Changes Depression Brings

Not Me

Depression brings changes

Depression affects people in different ways, and brings about different combinations of warning signs for each person. What is common to everyone is that depression brings changes.

Not yourself?

Sometimes, depression brings quite obvious changes. It is almost as if you can't recognise yourself anymore. You might look at this new self and not like what you see, not realising that it is depression which has changed you.

Others may notice changes

Sometimes the tunnel vision brought on by depression means that you do not realise how much you're being affected. In this case, it can be friends, family or others who point out that you're different or that something isn't right.

Different for everyone

The changes depression brings will be different for each person. The changes may feel very subtle and internal, with the 'public' you seeming to go on as normal. Or the changes may be obvious and dramatic. It may feel as if you have been very suddenly affected, or you may look back and notice a long, slow slide down into depression.

What changes can you identify?

If you have checked the warning signs and think depression may be affecting you, it would be useful to look more carefully for what specific changes have taken place in your life:

  1. Think back to when you feel fairly sure you weren't being affected by depression (say 6 months ago, but it could be longer than this).
  2. Now reflect on each area of your life: work, social life, family relationships, sex life, and so on.
  3. Go through each area and note the changes: how is this area of your life different now from what it was like then?

Click here for a comprehensive personal survey to print off and fill in.

Why me?

Your answers can provide very useful information for a doctor or other professional who you go to for help. It can also help in trying to work out why depression is affecting you, and in choosing strategies for tackling depression and finding what works for you.

Next:

why me? >>

 

Links

More about signs of depression: warning signs, is depression affecting me?
More about how depression works: why me?, the depression habit spiral, depressed thinking, stress, anxiety & anger
More about tackling depression and finding what works for you.
More about sources of help: what do doctors offer?, what do counsellors offer?